Clinical Improvements Following a Non-Aerobic Therapeutic Exercise in Women with Long COVID
[Line breaks added]
Background/Objectives: Long COVID (LC) is characterized by persistent symptoms such as fatigue, pain, and reduced quality of life, often lasting months after acute infection...
Impact of Prior History of Traumatic Stress on Autonomic and Multi-System Symptoms Following COVID-19 Infection
[Line breaks added]
Background
Persistent symptoms of autonomic dysregulation are common after COVID-19 infection and may result from alterations in central and/or peripheral...
I previously wrote this about the supplementary table:
I just came across a 2020 article that explains it:
The Verge: 'Scientists rename human genes to stop Microsoft Excel from misreading them as dates'
Sure enough, the two lines in the table that have a date instead of a gene are "1-Mar"...
That link is for the new double blinded trial, while the updates being discussed are on the pilot study protocol: https://euclinicaltrials.eu/ctis-public/view/2024-512500-19-00?lang=en
Look for anywhere it says "1.7" for the latest updates. There's discussion about clinical response on page 35...
One thing I'm not sure about is whether testing for the newly added 108 participants was done totally separately from the original 37 from the last study.
They say everyone from that last study was ill for up to 179 days ago at the time of testing:
So they would all be in the <200 group, and...
After seeing the data and seeing that these metrics seemed to be worse in people who had been ill longer, they decided to split into two groups to see what the difference between the two groups might be.
They chose 200 days because it splits them cleanly into two groups by their calculated...
Hmm, that's confusing. The paper points to Supplementary Table 7:
But the table doesn't include any of these three that they say are most significant:
Colorectal cancer is most significant, as suggested by the plot above. So I think they looked at the top three terms in their plot above...
PDK4 and PDHA1 were upregulated in the tissues exposed to ME/CFS serum in this study:
They were also upregulated in another study:
Metabolic profiling indicates impaired pyruvate dehydrogenase function in myalgic encephalopathy/chronic fatigue syndrome, 2016, Fluge et al
Though PDK4 was...
Main points:
The recently posted study is just meant to determine the best dose for a future larger efficacy trial.
It's not yet recruiting or funded. Posting the protocol was the first step in the process to get funding.
There is a follow-up to this study: Evidence of Accumulating Neurophysiologic Dysfunction in Persistent Post-COVID Fatigue (2025, Germann et al, Preprint)
They combined data from two groups of people with post-COVID fatigue. A group of 37 that they analyzed previously, plus data for another group of 108 patients.
Here are the threads for the previous studies (refs 15, 16):
- Neural dysregulation in post-COVID fatigue 2023 Baker et al
- Recovery...
This looks pretty interesting because they tested a lot of different objective nervous system metrics. I don't know much about these measures, but there's measurements related to things like reaction time, cortical excitability, blood oxygen saturation, and peripheral fatigue. Some examples...
Evidence of Accumulating Neurophysiologic Dysfunction in Persistent Post-COVID Fatigue
[Line breaks added]
Abstract
A major consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic has been the emergence of post-COVID syndrome (PCS), and more specifically, post-COVID fatigue (pCF), with an estimated prevalence...
I don't know much either, but I thought there was a way to filter molecules by size. So you'd split patient serum into large molecules and small molecules, and see which of these still has an effect on the muscle like in this study. Then split the one that does by size again and try again. It...
I took a long break from adding studies to my app after I let perfect become the enemy of good, and became overwhelmed and overworked.
Basically, I was trying to create an all encompassing criteria that could apply to every study I came across, and as you can see it was getting quite...
The IOM criteria, which many studies, including DecodeME, use, doesn't require a flu-like feeling. From DecodeME:
Edit: The criteria from the NICE 2021 guidelines doesn't require flu-like feelings either.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.